English Setters, Pointers 
and 
Wire Haired Fox Terriers 
Puppies and grown dogs 
of the best of breeding 
EZ0O3RSe on AaL, EB 
Good dogs at stud 
GEO. W. LOVELL 
MIDDLEBORO, MASS. 
Tel. 29-M 
lf Your Dog Is Sick, 
all run down, thin and un- 
thrifty with materated eyes, 
high-colored urine and harsh 
staring coat, ‘‘eating grass’’ 
won’t help him. Dent’s Con- 
dition Pills will. They are 
a marvelous tonic for mange, 
distemper, indigestion and 
out of sorts. Price 50c., 
druggists, or mail. 
DENT MEDICINE CO., 
Newburgh, N. Y. 

FOODS and FEEDING 
By J. Z. RINE 
Now Ready for Distribution, One of the Most Useful 
and Instructive Books Ever Given to the Dog Fancier 
on the Common Sense and Scientific Way to 
FEED YOUR DOG 
For Health, Bone, Muscle, Flesh, Strength, General 
Condition, Special Instructions for Stud Dogs, Brood 
Matrons and Puppies. The first volume of ‘“KENNEL 
KRAFT” is the one book of the lifetime for the 
cwner of a dog, either kennel or private. Send for 
prospectus. 
ONE DOLLAR POSTPAID 
FIELD AND FANCY PUB. CORP. 
205 West 34th St., New York, N. Y. 
Send for free sample copy cf Field and Fancy and 
Special trial subscription including “FOODS 
AND FEEDING.’’ 


Free Dog Book 
by noted specialist. Tells how to 
FEED AND TRAIN 
your dog 
KEEP HIM HEALTHY 
and 
CURE DOG DISEASES. 
How to put dog in condition, kill 
fleas, cure scratching, mange, dis- 
temper. Gives twenty-five famous 
Q-W DoG REMEDIES 
and 150 illustrations of dog leads, training collars 
harness, stripping combs, dog houses, etc. Mailed free 
Q-W LABORATORIES 
Dept.6 Bound Brook, New Jersey 













DOGDOM 
America’s Greatest Dog Magazine 
Devoted to all breeds 
Monthly articles by Freeman Lloyd, A. F. 
Hochwalt, Lillian C. Raymond-Mallock, W. 
R. Van Dyck, Bert Franklin, D.V.M., ‘and 
other well known writers. Profusely illus- 
trated. Twenty cents a copy. Send for 
free sample. 
$2.00 a year; Canadian, $2.25; Foreign, $2.50 
DOGDOM Book Department can supply 
any book about dogs published. Write to- 
day for book-list. 
DOGDOM 
F. E. Bechmann, Publisher 
509 City Nat’l Bank Bldg., Battle Creek, Michigan 
In writing to Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. 

“i Ws 
Photo by Harry Kirkover 

Types of Grouse Dogs 
By SENECA 
Grouse dogs, both of which will 
prove of great value and pleas- 
ure to those who love to visit the 
haunts of these birds and to hear the 
startling “whir” of their wings and pit 
their skill as a marksman against their 
cunning and speed. You and your dog 
for it, against the wiliest bird in our 
borders, and you are due for as good 
a “thrill” as any game can give, be it 
great or small. The first really good 
Grouse dog I ever saw was of a type 
which many sportsmen and especially 
elderly men in the game are looking for 
to-day. He was what you might call 
a slow dog—he had plenty of speed and 
activity, when he desired to put them 
forth, but he had learned to conserve 
these for himself and for you, so that 
he was ready to go along every day 
of a long shooting season. His knowl- 
edge of the game was immense and his 
bird sense and exquisite nose made him 
a very formidable bird-finding machine. 
He worked with his head well up and 
his nose working overtime, and all con- 
ditions seemed to suit him, and he al- 
ways delivered many points in a day’s 
shooting. His speed was a swift trot 
and his range was well under observa- 
tion. He would bore up an old road 
or trail, feeling out the wind on both 
sides with his perfect nose, and any 
bird that happened to be lying from 
50 to 100 yards on either side he would 
wind and he would stop and point, and 
then when you had come up he would 
lead you carefully and accurately to the 
exact spot. His bird work was perfect 
in location and approach and no bird 
who stayed on the ground could elude 
ives are at least two types of 
It will identify you. 
him. Pitted against many a good fast 
dog, at the end of the day he had al- 
ways done his full share of the work. 
On one occasion I was going for a day’s 
shooting with a friend who had a won- 
derfully good fast bitch, and usually 
she picked up everything before her 
brace mate got there. Her owner would 
relate with pride, “that no dog had ever 
found the first bird before she did and 
that seldom had any brace mate ever 
found a bird when she was down.” It 
was a good story. We started and be- 
fore long the bitch made a spectacular 
stand, and in glee my companion said 
that “it always happened that way,” 
but we could raise no birds to the point. 
The steady, slow old dog had bored 
ahead and was seen standing on point 
up an old trail, and as always he had 
birds. After the shooting my friend 
said my dog had wrecked his good 
story, which he could not relate again. 
I said it was only an accident. We 
went on and on and it continued to 
happen, and while my good friend had 
a brilliant dog, the slow old fellow had 
the knowledge and the nose and out- 
guessed her at every turn. Every once 
in a while the old fellow would delib- 
erately come to me to see if everything 
was lovely, and I would hold down my 
hand and he would rub his nose in it, 
and then with a glad look in his eyes 
he would go on to find us another. He 
and I had a very mutual understand- 
ing, which we both enjoyed immensely. 
S OME one will say this dog was only 
a “meat dog.” That expression has 
come to be used and accepted as a slur 
on many a good dog, while the fellow 
Page 446 
